By now, practically everybody has condemned Missouri
Republican Senate candidate Todd Akin for his bizarre claim that a natural defense
mechanism prevents women from becoming pregnant as a result of rape.Because of that statement, previously
endangered Democrat incumbent Claire McCaskill has
taken a 10-point lead over Akin in the latest poll.Still, one must never underestimate the
Democrats’ ability to overplay their hand.

Not
content with salvaging one Senate seat, they’re trying to smear all
Republicans, and all opponents of abortion, as if they shared in the ignorance
of Akin’s opinion.Unwilling to accept
decades of consistent polling data telling them that their pro-abortion
absolutism is a political loser, Democrats have seized on the Akin incident in
an attempt to rehabilitate their favorite cause.They may even make it the centerpiece of
their upcoming convention.

In a speech to Planned Parenthood, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D,
Calif.) said, “It’s deeper than one Republican congressman.It goes all the way to the top of the
Republican ticket.”Following a series
of blitheringly stupid remarks in which she equated opposition to abortion with
tolerance of rape, Boxer asked, “Where’s the outrage by Mitt Romney?There is a sickness out there in the
Republican Party, and I’m not kidding.Maybe they don’t like their moms or their first wives.”Romney had actually condemned Akin’s comments
as “offensive and wrong,” and called for him to drop out of the race, but why
should Boxer start acknowledging the facts with that one?

Aside from giving pro-abortion Democrats an excuse to
perpetuate their “War on Women” fantasy, Akin has enabled them to pose as the
experts on biological issues, as opposed to those knuckle-dragging religious
conservatives, who, as we all know, “fear science.”If only we had news reporters in this
country, perhaps they would start asking Democrats, and especially
abortion-supporters, to demonstrate their purported expertise where the facts
of life are concerned.

On October 20, 1999, Sen. Boxer was being questioned by Sen.
Rick Santorum (R, Pa.) in a debate over the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act,
when he confronted her with the question of when life begins.“I think when you bring your baby home, when
your baby is born – and there is no such thing as partial-birth – the baby
belongs to your family and has all the rights.”

Your baby has all the rights of a person when you bring it
home?She seems to suggest that biology
isn’t enough, but that some form of societal validation is necessary to
establish personhood.Perhaps the mother
should take her baby to a notary, and have the word “person” officially stamped
on its forehead.Furthermore, how can
there be no such thing as partial-birth?Are babies born instantaneously, as if being beamed through Scotty’s
transporter?If a pro-life Republican
had said there’s no such thing as partial-birth,
he would now stand accused of callousness toward the pain that women go through
during childbirth.

Santorum sportingly gave Boxer another chance to answer
whether she would “accept the fact that once the baby is separated from the
mother, that baby cannot be killed.”She
responded by asking him to define separation, which few other people would have
found so confusing.Santorum helpfully
explained that it means “no part of the baby is inside of the mother.”

Boxer responded, “You mean the baby has been birthed and is
now in its mother’s arms?That baby is a
human being.”

“Well, I don’t know if it’s necessarily in its mother’s
arms,” Santorum said.“Let’s say in the
obstetrician’s hands.”

At this point, Sen. Boxer, representing the Party of
Science, began to utter the most incredible answer.“It takes a second, it takes a minute.I had two babies, and within seconds of their
birth -- ”

Unfortunately, Santorum interrupted her at this point, and
the exchange that followed allowed Boxer to escape having to finish that
sentence.Nevertheless, there’s no
mistaking the fact that she’d already indicated that a baby fails to qualify
for personhood until some point after its birth.

Boxer later disavowed her own words, but Akin has done the
same thing.If he can’t get away with
it, then neither should she.Moreover,
her belief is the one that’s truly representative of her party and its
cause.Mitt Romney certainly does not
share the viewpoint expressed by Akin, but President Obama just as surely
agrees with everything Boxer said, as his record in the Illinois state senate
will attest.